CV
You can download my full CV here (PDF)
Education
- Ph.D. in Political Economy and Government (Economics Track), Harvard University (expected 2027)
- Master in Public Policy, Harvard Kennedy School — Fulbright-García Robles Scholar (2021)
- B.A. in Economics, Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM) — Graduated with Highest Honors (2018)
Work and Research Experience
- Research Assistant, Macroeconomics and Growth Team, World Bank
- Research Assistant, Fiscal and Municipal Management Division, Inter-American Development Bank (IADB)
Research Projects
Training Within Firms
Brayan Diaz, Andrea Neyra-Nazarrett, Julian Ramirez, Raffaella Sadun, Jorge Tamayo
This paper explores the organizational frictions that hinder training implementation within firms, focusing on the role of middle managers. Using data from three large Latin American firms—a car manufacturer, a quick-service restaurant chain, and a retailer—we show that middle managers who promote employee development boost training take-up and improve performance. Managerial rotations and event study methods reveal that “High Training” managers increase participation by up to 60%. The findings underscore the importance of embedding managerial behavior into human capital policy design.
An Anatomy of Managerial Attention: Evidence from Retail
Achyuta Adhvaryu, Parker Howell, Andrea Neyra-Nazarrett, Anant Nyshadham, Jorge Tamayo
This study examines how managerial attention to complexity drives productivity in a large Colombian retail firm. High-performing managers reduce stockouts, streamline inventory, simplify product assortments, and improve pricing. Manager arrival leads to staffing changes toward sales, pricing, and inventory roles. Using AKM fixed effects and survey data, we document specific behavioral and organizational responses that explain performance variation in complex operational settings.
VAT Holidays as Short-Term Economic Stimuli: The Case of Colombia’s “Días sin IVA”
José Martinez-Carrasco, David Muñoz, Andrea Neyra-Nazarrett, Alejandro Rasteletti, Diego Zamora
We evaluate Colombia’s VAT holiday policy (2020–2022) using 1.3 billion Bancolombia transactions. A repeated regression discontinuity design finds a 14% increase in sales during DSI events, with durable goods like electronics experiencing the highest gains. Effects are strongest among stores serving low-income consumers. Results highlight the stimulus potential of well-designed, broad-based tax holidays in emerging economies.
Teaching
- Teaching Fellow, Survey Research Methods, Harvard University
- Teaching Fellow, Advanced Quantitative Methods for the Social Sciences, Harvard University
- Teaching Fellow, Economics of Discontinuous Change, Harvard University
- Tutor, Quantitative and Qualitative Methods, Harvard Kennedy School
- Course Coach, Environmental Politics: Negotiation, Persuasion, and Leadership (IGA-455), Harvard Kennedy School
- Teaching Fellow, The Politics of Development (DPI-410), Harvard Kennedy School
- Teaching Fellow, Public Finance in the International Perspective (DEV-215), Harvard Kennedy School
- Teaching Assistant, Advanced Markets and Market Failure (API-101Z), Harvard Kennedy School
Grants, Fellowships, and Honors
- The Kenneth C. Griffin Economics Research Fund
- Colombia Economics of Education and Climate Change Research Fund
- DRCLAS Summer Fellowship
- Mildred Rendl PhD 1954 Graduate Student Fellow
- Fulbright-García Robles Scholarship
- Harvard Ash Center Research Project Fellowship
- Harvard Kennedy School Summer Research Fellowship
- Comecyt Talent and Excellence Scholarship
- Comecyt “Posgrado en el Extranjero” Scholarship
- Conacyt-FUNED Scholarship
- Dionisio Medina Harvard Scholarship
Conferences Organized
- Co-Chair, The Mexico Conference, Harvard Kennedy School (2021)
- Co-Organizer, The Mexico Conference, Harvard Kennedy School (2020)
